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In this episode of Stewart Squared, both Stewarts have a wide-ranging conversation that jumps from Claude and Anthropic’s aggressive move against OpenAI employees to the deep history of corporations stretching back to Rome and the East India Company, the mechanics of preferred versus common shares in venture capital, and the recent Figma IPO. Along the way, they contrast speculation and perception in tech markets with hard fundamentals, debate the trajectories of Meta, Apple, and Microsoft in the age of AI, and explore how accounting principles shape both businesses and governments. The discussion widens into geopolitics, from China’s centralized economic power to Israel’s struggle with soft power in the information age, before circling back to the personal lessons Stewart Alsop II learned entering venture capital in the late 1990s.
Check out this GPT we trained on the conversation
Timestamps
00:00 Claude and Anthropic cut off OpenAI employees, sparking a debate on passive vs active aggression, leading into Roman corporations and the East India Company.
05:00 Investors and management are separated through preferred vs common shares, with venture capital structuring conflicts across series rounds.
10:00 Figma’s IPO and Adobe’s blocked acquisition illustrate up rounds, preferences, and investor dynamics when companies succeed or falter.
15:00 Meta’s trajectory from social networks to Oculus, Ray-Bans, and AI labs shows Zuckerberg’s drive to stay relevant, paralleling Microsoft’s rebound under Satya Nadella.
20:00 Public markets, meme stocks, and Apple stock missteps highlight the contrast between speculation, Warren Buffett’s patience, and looming crash fears.
25:00 AI as chaos agent reshapes big tech relevance, with OpenAI’s billion-a-month revenue and Anthropic’s rise pressing Apple, Microsoft, and Meta.
30:00 Gross margins, operating costs, and GAAP reveal how accounting frames strategy, with capitalism vs socialism compared to U.S. government’s one-sided bookkeeping.
35:00 National interest and corporations shift into geopolitics: China’s central planning, Israel’s hard vs soft power struggle, and information age influence.
40:00 Lessons from entering VC in 1997, from missing Amazon and Netflix to early TiVo, reveal timing, firm politics, and venture capital’s internal power struggles.
45:00 Bureaucracies, Trump’s deep state capture, and Curtis Yarvin’s neo-feudal patchwork theory open a discussion on Bukele, Milei, and political reordering.
50:00 Democrats’ weakness, Kamala Harris’s 107 Days, and Project 2025 frame America’s polarization as Trump consolidates MAGA power with no clear opposition.
Key Insights
In this episode of Stewart Squared, both Stewarts have a wide-ranging conversation that jumps from Claude and Anthropic’s aggressive move against OpenAI employees to the deep history of corporations stretching back to Rome and the East India Company, the mechanics of preferred versus common shares in venture capital, and the recent Figma IPO. Along the way, they contrast speculation and perception in tech markets with hard fundamentals, debate the trajectories of Meta, Apple, and Microsoft in the age of AI, and explore how accounting principles shape both businesses and governments. The discussion widens into geopolitics, from China’s centralized economic power to Israel’s struggle with soft power in the information age, before circling back to the personal lessons Stewart Alsop II learned entering venture capital in the late 1990s.
Check out this GPT we trained on the conversation
Timestamps
00:00 Claude and Anthropic cut off OpenAI employees, sparking a debate on passive vs active aggression, leading into Roman corporations and the East India Company.
05:00 Investors and management are separated through preferred vs common shares, with venture capital structuring conflicts across series rounds.
10:00 Figma’s IPO and Adobe’s blocked acquisition illustrate up rounds, preferences, and investor dynamics when companies succeed or falter.
15:00 Meta’s trajectory from social networks to Oculus, Ray-Bans, and AI labs shows Zuckerberg’s drive to stay relevant, paralleling Microsoft’s rebound under Satya Nadella.
20:00 Public markets, meme stocks, and Apple stock missteps highlight the contrast between speculation, Warren Buffett’s patience, and looming crash fears.
25:00 AI as chaos agent reshapes big tech relevance, with OpenAI’s billion-a-month revenue and Anthropic’s rise pressing Apple, Microsoft, and Meta.
30:00 Gross margins, operating costs, and GAAP reveal how accounting frames strategy, with capitalism vs socialism compared to U.S. government’s one-sided bookkeeping.
35:00 National interest and corporations shift into geopolitics: China’s central planning, Israel’s hard vs soft power struggle, and information age influence.
40:00 Lessons from entering VC in 1997, from missing Amazon and Netflix to early TiVo, reveal timing, firm politics, and venture capital’s internal power struggles.
45:00 Bureaucracies, Trump’s deep state capture, and Curtis Yarvin’s neo-feudal patchwork theory open a discussion on Bukele, Milei, and political reordering.
50:00 Democrats’ weakness, Kamala Harris’s 107 Days, and Project 2025 frame America’s polarization as Trump consolidates MAGA power with no clear opposition.
Key Insights